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Display Greek small letter mu (#14426)...
Display Greek small letter mu (#14426) `%time foo()` output is often copied into code comments to explain performance improvements. The `\xb5` Latin Extended micro sign and the `\u03bc` Greek small letter mu have different codes but often look identical. Output mu to align with: * [The International System of Units (SI) brochure]( https://www.bipm.org/documents/20126/41483022/SI-Brochure-9-EN.pdf ), such as Table 7 SI prefixes * NFKC normalized [Python code](https://peps.python.org/pep-3131/ ) and [domain names](https://unicode.org/reports/tr36/). For example: ```sh python -c 'print("""class C: \xb5=1 print(hex(ord(dir(C)[-1])))""")' | tee /dev/fd/2 | python - ``` ```python class C: µ=1 print(hex(ord(dir(C)[-1]))) ``` `0x3bc` * Section 2.5 Duplicated Characters of [Unicode Technical Report 25]( https://www.unicode.org/reports/tr25/) > ...U+03BC μ is the preferred character in a Unicode context. * Ruff confusable mapping [updates]( https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/4430/files ), currently in the "preview" stage Add a unit test for UTF-8 display and https://bugs.launchpad.net/ipython/+bug/348466 ASCII fallback.

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test_exampleip.txt
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Tests in example form - IPython
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You can write text files with examples that use IPython prompts (as long as you
use the nose ipython doctest plugin), but you can not mix and match prompt
styles in a single file. That is, you either use all ``>>>`` prompts or all
IPython-style prompts. Your test suite *can* have both types, you just need to
put each type of example in a separate. Using IPython prompts, you can paste
directly from your session::
In [5]: s="Hello World"
In [6]: s.upper()
Out[6]: 'HELLO WORLD'
Another example::
In [8]: 1+3
Out[8]: 4
Just like in IPython docstrings, you can use all IPython syntax and features::
In [9]: !echo hello
hello
In [10]: a='hi'
In [11]: !echo $a
hi